National Semiconductor Application Note 752 May 1993 OVERVIEW The National Semiconductor ST-NIC Evaluation Board design provides IBM AT's and AT Compatibles with Thick Ethernet Thin Ethernet and Twisted Pair connections This low parts count Evaluation Board is compatible with the AT bus and requires only a size slot for insertion The board uses the DP83902 DP83902 (ST-NIC) to interface to twisted pair Ethernet The ST-NIC also has an AUI Port which allows interface to thick wire Ethernet or thin wire Ethernet by the addition of the DP8392 DP8392 Coaxial Transceiver Interface (CTI) The dual DMA (local and remote) capabilities of the ST-NIC along with 16 Kbytes of buffer RAM allow the entire Network Interface Adapter to appear as a standard I O Port to the system The NIC module's local DMA channel buffers packets between the local memory (16 Kbytes of buffer RAM) and the network while the NIC module's remote DMA channel passes data between the local memory and the system by way of an I O Port This I O Port architecture which isolates the CPU from the network traffic proves to be the simplest method to interface the DP83902 DP83902 to the system HARDWARE FEATURES Half-size IBM PC-AT I O Card Form Factor Y Utilizes DP83902 DP83902 Serial Network Interface Controller for Twisted Pair (ST-NIC) Y 16 Kbyte on-board Packet Buffer Y Simple I O port interface to IBM PC-AT Y Interfaces to Thick Ethernet Thin Ethernet and Twisted Pair Y Boot EPROM Socket The detailed schematics for this design are shown at the end of this document Y NETWORK INTERFACE OPTIONS The evaluation board supports three physical layer options Thick Ethernet Thin Ethernet and Twisted Pair The block diagram for these interfaces can be seen in Figure 1 When using Thick Ethernet a drop cable is connected to an external transceiver which is in turn connected to a standard Ethernet network eliminating the need for an internal transceiver This configuration may be obtained by connecting the pins on JB3 while leaving JB2 open and connecting JB9 (AUTP) to VCC DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT PC-AT Compatible DP83902 DP83902 ST-NIC Ethernet Evaluation Board DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT PC-AT Compatible DP83902 DP83902 ST-NIC TM Ethernet Evaluation Board TL F 11158 ­ 1 FIGURE 1 Physical Layer Adapter Interface Block Diagram AN-752 AN-752 TRI-STATE is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation ST-NICTM is a trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation IBM and PC-AT are registered trademarks of International Business Machine Corporation PAL is a registered trademark of and used under license from Advanced MicroDevices Inc C1995 C1995 National Semiconductor Corporation TL F 11158 RRD-B30M115 RRD-B30M115 Printed in U S A When using Thin Ethernet a transceiver (the CTI) is available on-board to allow the evaluation board to directly connect to the network This transceiver (the CTI) forms the link between the differential ECL signals of the SNI module and the non-differential ECL signal of the thin-wire coaxial cable A DC-DC Convertor is provided on the board to supply the CTI with b9V isolated voltage source The Thin Ethernet solution is made by connecting the pins on JB2 leaving JB3 open and JB9 (AUTP) should be connected to VCC The diagram in Figure 2 illustrates the layout of the board It shows the various jumpers ICs LEDs and the connectors for the three physical layer options The transmit pre-emphasis resistors R27 ­ R30 provide equalization to the twisted pair transmit outputs This boosts the higher harmonics of the signal in order to compensate for losses in these harmonics over the twisted pair cable R19 and R20 are 50X each and when combined form the required 100X termination on the receive side When using the Twisted Pair JB9 (AUTP) needs to be connected to ground The ST-NIC allows direct connection to the network using the RJ-45 RJ-45 phone jack The remaining circuitry includes pre-emphasis resistors a filter a transformer filter and a common mode choke The transformer filter decouples the DC component and eliminates any possible voltage spikes BUS INTERFACE The block diagram Figure 3 illustrates the architecture of the ST-NIC Evaluation Board The ST-NIC Board as seen by the system appears only to be an I O port With this architecture the ST-NIC board has its own local bus to access the board memory The system never has to intrude further than the I O ports for any packet data operation This I O architecture isolates the system bus and the local bus thereby preventing interference by the system when the STNIC is doing real-time accesses such as transmitting and receiving packets TL F 11158 ­ 2 FIGURE 2 Layout of ST-NIC Evaluation Board 2 These alternate address spaces may be selected by the two jumper pins JP1 and JP0 (refer to JB4 in Figure 4 and Appendix A) BOARD ARCHITECTURE I O Map of ST-NIC Board The ST-NIC Board requires a 32-byte I O space to allow for decoding the data buffers the reset port and the ST-NIC registers The first 16 bytes (300h­30Fh) are used to address the ST-NIC registers (8 bits wide) and the next 8 bytes (310h ­ 317h) are used to address the data buffers which are 16 bits wide Finally the reset port (also software selectable) may be addressed by 318h­31Fh DP83902 DP83902's Local Memory Map There are only two items mapped into the local memory space These two items being the 8K x 16 buffer RAM and the ID address PROM The buffer RAM is used for temporary storage of transmit and receive packets TABLE II ST-NIC's Local Memory Map TABLE I I O MAP in PC-AT 7FFFh Address Part Addressed 300h­30Fh 310h­317h 318h­31Fh ST-NIC Chip Select Data Buffers Reset RAM 4000h 3FFFh PROM 0000h Although in the description above the I O map is positioned at the addresses 300­31F it may also be placed in the following address spaces 320­33F 340­35F 360 ­ 37F TL F 11158 ­ 3 FIGURE 3 Block Diagram of ST-NIC Evaluation Board's System Interface 3 For transmit packets the remote DMA puts data from the I O ports into the RAM and the local DMA moves the data from the RAM to the ST-NIC For the receive packets the local DMA carries the data from the ST-NIC to the RAM and the remote DMA moves the data from the RAM to the I O ports The ID address PROM (74S288 74S288 32 x 8) contains the physical address of the evaluation board Each PROM holds its own unique physical address which is installed during its manufacture The PROM also contains some identification bytes that can be checked by the driver software At the initialization of the evaluation board the software commands the ST-NIC to transfer the PROM data to the I O Port where it is read by the CPU The CPU then loads the ST-NIC's physical address registers The following chart shows the contents of the PROM EPROM SOCKET The EPROM socket is provided so that the user may add an EPROM to the system This EPROM would normally contain a program and a driver to enable the PC-AT to be booted up through the network The chips necessary to interface the EPROM to the system are the 27128 (EPROM) a 16L8 (PAL) and a 74ALS244 74ALS244 (buffer) Also JB5 must be placed in the proper selection as described in the jumper section The PAL decodes SA14 ­ SA19 along with SMRDC (system memory read) in order to generate the EPROMEN signal This signal issued when the PC wants to execute the program stored in the EPROM enables the EPROM and the 244 buffer EVALUATION BOARD OPERATION The following pages will describe the slave accesses to the ST-NIC and the local DMA and remote DMA operation TABLE III PROM Contents PROM Location Register Operations Accesses to the board are register operations to the DP83902 DP83902 which are done to set up the ST-NIC and to control the operation of the ST-NIC's DMA channels Location Contents 00h Ethernet Address 0 (Most Significant Byte) 01h Ethernet Address 1 REGISTER READ 02h Ethernet Address 2 03h Ethernet Address 3 04h Ethernet Address 4 05h Ethernet Address 5 To begin the register read the CPU drives the four address lines (SA0 ­ SA3) to the ST-NIC and the SA3 ­ SA9 address lines to the PAL These address lines are decoded by the PAL in order to generate a chip select to the ST-NIC The CPU also drives the NIOR line which the ST-NIC sees as the NSRD (slave read) Once the ST-NIC receives this NSRD it then sends out a high assertion on NACK acknowledging that it is in slave mode but not yet ready to complete the read The NACK signal is used by the PAL to assert the IOCHRDY (used to insert wait states) signal false The ST-NIC then drives out the data from its internal registers to the 245 buffer The 245 buffer is then enabled and the data is driven onto the AT BUS When the ST-NIC is ready it asserts NACK true and the PAL asserts IOCHRDY true As a result NIOR is driven high by the CPU thereby deasserting the NSRD On the rising edge of the NIOR the data which is on the AT BUS is latched into the system The addresses are removed at the same time causing the ST-NIC chip select to become deasserted ending the register read cycle 06h ­ 0Dh 00h 0Eh 0Fh 57h 10h ­ 15h Ethernet Address 0 thru 5 16h ­ 1Dh Reserved 1Eh 1Fh 42h Data and Address Paths For the following paragraph refer to the block diagram shown in Figure 3 Twenty address lines from the PC go onto the ST-NIC Board but only four of them actually go to the ST-NIC These four addresses along with the NIOR (low-asserted I O read) or NIOW (low-asserted I O write) and the CS (ST-NIC chip select signal) allow the PC to read or write to the ST-NIC's registers If the system wants to read from or write to the ST-NIC registers the data (only 8 bits) must pass through the 245 buffer All of the packet data will pass through the I O ports (the 374's) Each 374 is unidirectional and can only drive 8 bits therefore it is necessary to have four 374's Two of which drive data from the ports to the board memory and two of which drive the data from the ports to the AT bus Even the PROM which can only be addressed by the ST-NIC sends its 8 bits of data out through the 374's When the PROM does this two of the 374's will be enabled but only the lower 8 bits will be read by the system The RAM is also accessed by the STNIC However it is addressed by 14 bits and drives out 16 bits of data The PALs receive 7 address lines among many other signals such as NIOR NIOW NACK MRD etc With these signals the PALs do all of the decodes such as selecting the ST-NIC Board the ST-NIC chip the RAM and the PROM REGISTER WRITE To begin the register write the CPU drives the SA0 ­ SA3 address lines to the ST-NIC and the SA4 ­ SA9 address lines to the PAL With these address lines the PAL decodes to 300 ­ 30F (the ST-NIC registers) thereby enabling the chip select for the ST-NIC The CPU then drives the NIOW strobe which the ST-NIC sees as NSWR (slave write) Once the ST-NIC receives this NSWR it sends back a low assertion on NACK to acknowledge that it is in slave mode and ready to perform the write When the CPU receives this signal it puts data out onto the AT BUS where it goes into the 245 buffer The 245 buffer then drives the data to the STNIC but the data is not latched into the ST-NIC until the rising edge of NIOW The system drives NIOW high thereby deasserting the NSWR and latching the data The addresses also are taken away and the chip select then goes high (deasserted) This ends the cycle of the register write 4 Remote Transfers Network Transfers Remote DMA transfers are operations performed by the STNIC on the board These operations occur when the ST-NIC is programmed to transfer packet data between the PC-AT and the card's on-board RAM These transfers take place through the I O Port interface Transfers to and from the network are controlled by the DP83902 DP83902's local DMA channel which transfers packet data to from the ST-NIC's internal FIFO from to the card buffer's RAM RECEIVE The data comes off of the network is deserialized and is stored in the FIFO inside of the ST-NIC The ST-NIC then issues a BREQ and immediately receives BACK since the lines are tied together After receiving BACK the ST-NIC drives the address lines to the 373's The 373's are latched by ADS0 and the address is allowed to flow to the RAM Then the ST-NIC drives out NMWR along with the data from the FIFO The data flows into the RAM under the address given earlier The NMWR strobe is then deasserted ending the cycle REMOTE READ To program the ST-NIC for a remote read the CPU must make five slave accesses to the ST-NIC The CPU must write the Remote Start Address (2 bytes) the Remote Byte Count (2 bytes) and issue the Remote DMA Read Command The addresses and byte count require two transfers because they are both 16 bits yet only 8 bits can be written per transfer Once the ST-NIC has received all of the above data it drives out BREQ and waits for BACK The ST-NIC immediately receives BACK because it is tied to the BREQ line (BREQ can be tied to BACK because there are no other devices contending for the local bus ) After receiving BACK the ST-NIC drives out the address from which the data is required to be read This address flows into the 373's and is latched by ADS0 From here the address flows to the RAM The RAM waits until it receives MRD from the ST-NIC and then it drives the data into the 374 ports The 374 ports then latch the data on the rising edge of the PWR strobe from the ST-NIC PRQ is then sent out by the ST-NIC to let the system know that there is data waiting in the ports If the AT reads the I O ports before the ST-NIC has loaded the 374's then the port request (PRQ) from the ST-NIC will not yet be driven This unasserted PRQ signal causes the AT's ready line to be set low indicating that the ST-NIC has yet to load the data After the data is in the ports the system must then read the 374 data ports This begins with the AT driving out an address which is decoded (inside the PAL) to the data I O Ports (310­31F) The PAL then drives RACK to the ST-NIC indicating that the CPU is ready to accept data This RACK signal then reads the data from the 374 ports onto the AT BUS The system deasserts NIOR which finishes the cycle TRANSMIT To begin the transmit cycle the ST-NIC issues a BREQ and waits for the BACK Since the BREQ and BACK lines are tied together the BACK signal is received immediately Upon reception of this signal the ST-NIC drives out the address to the 373's which latch the address with the ADS0 strobe The address then flows to the onboard memory NMRD driven by ST-NIC causes the RAM to drive the data out of the given address and into the ST-NIC The ST-NIC then latches the data into the FIFO on the rising edge of NMRD This high assertion of NMRD signifies the ending of this cycle From the FIFO the data is serialized and transmitted onto the network BOARD CONFIGURATION On the DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT ST-NIC AT board there are nine jumper blocks as seen in the diagram below The following pages wiill explain how to configure these jumpers Physical Layer If JB9 is tied to Ground then the twisted pair interface will be selected If JB2 is closed while JB3 is open and JB9 is connected to VCC then the Thin Ethernet option will be selected And finally if JB3 is closed while JB2 is open and JB9 is high then the Thick Ethernet option will be selected Refer to Appendix A for Jumper settings REMOTE WRITE Like the remote read the remote write cycle also begins with five slave accesses into the internal registers The CPU must write the Remote Start Address (2 bytes) the Remote Byte Count (2 bytes) and issue the Remote DMA Write Command The ST-NIC then issues a PRQ The CPU responds by sending an NIOW indicating that it is ready to write to the ports The CPU also drives out the address which corresponds to the I O Ports This address goes into the PAL and helps to decode to WACK This WACK signal latches the data into the 374 ports The ST-NIC issues a BREQ and immediately receives a BACK since the two lines are tied together (BREQ can be tied to BACK because there are no other devices contending for the local bus ) The ST-NIC upon receiving the BACK drives out address lines to the 373's These address lines are latched by ADS0 and then are driven to the RAM ST-NIC sends out a PRD and a NMWR which drives the data from the 374 ports into the already specified address of the onboard memory PRD and NMWR are then deasserted and the cycle ends Interrupt Lines Board Addresses and EPROM Addresses On JB4 there are six possible connections Four of these are to select an interrupt line The available interrupt lines include INT3 INT4 INT5 and INT9 The last two possible connections JP1 and JP0 are used to select the base address for the board However if JB5 is connected to VCC then these last two connections select the address of the EPROM also The possible selections and the jumpers are shown in Appendix A The factory configuration uses the INT3 line for interrupts and has JP1 and JP0 in the on position 5 This factory configuration is shown in Figure 4 along with the factory configurations for JB1 JB5 JB6 JB7 JB8 and JB9 The square pin indicates pin 1 of the jumpers TL F 11158 ­ 4 FIGURE 4 Factory Configuration for JB1 JB4 JB5 JB6 JB7 JB8 and JB9 APPENDIX A The following tables show all of the various jumper settings The shaded boxes are the Factory Configuration default settings JB1 High Link Enabled JB9 JB2 JB3 Low Link Disabled Low X X Twisted Pair JB5 High EPROM Address High On Off Thin Ethernet Low Base Address High Off On Thick Ethernet JB6 High Tx a and Txb are same in idle state INT9 INT3 INT4 INT5 Interrupt Selection Low Tx a is positive with respect to Txb in idle state On Off Off Off Interrupt 9 Off On Off Off Interrupt 3 High Normal Operation Off Off On Off Interrupt 4 Low ENDEC Module Testing Off Off Off On Interrupt 5 High Internal Function Testing Low Normal Operation JB7 JB8 JP1 JP0 Base Address EPROM Address On On 300h­31Fh C800h On Off 320h­33Fh CC00h Off On 340h­35Fh D000h Off Off 300h­37Fh D400h 6 Physical Layer Selected enable signal (NIOEN) loops back into the PAL to bring NIO16 NIO16 out of TRI-STATE The NIO16 NIO16 signal is set to zero so that whenever it is enabled it will be asserted APPENDIX B PAL EQUATIONS PAL 1 (U1) In this first PAL the output signals are NIO16 NIO16 NIOEN NSTNICB and NCSROM (The N's before the signals indicate that the signal is low asserted ) Since it is necessary to assert NIO16 NIO16 as soon as possible this first PAL has been selected to be a 10 ns ``D'' PAL The NIO16 NIO16 signal must be TRI-STATE when it is not asserted Therefore we use an enable signal (NIOEN) which is equal to the decode for the I O Ports (310­31F) and NAEN high (NAEN high signifies that the system DMA does not have control of the bus) The The STNICB signal consists of simple address decodes along with NAEN The addresses decode to one of four address slots which were mentioned earlier in the board configuration section The NCSROM is a very simple signal as it consists only of AD14 and NMRD AD14 comes from the ST-NIC and selects either the PROM (when low) or the onboard RAM (when high) PAL 1 TL F 11158 ­ 5 7 PAL TABLE IV R ­ S Flip Flop Truth Table 2 In this PAL there are eight outputs NRESET NSOUT NRDYEN NIOCHRDY NCS NRACK NWACK and INTO The first two outptus (NRESET and NSOUT) are part of an R ­ S flip flop as shown below R (NIOR) Q (NRESET) Q (NSOUT) 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 TL F 11158­6 S (NIOW) 1 1 0 By using the NIOR and NIOW which are never asserted at the same time this insures that the R-pin and the S-pin will never be asserted at the same time The next two signals (NRDYEN and NIOCHRDY) are quite similar to NIOEN and NIO16 NIO16 in PAL 1 All of the decode takes place in the enable signal (NRDYEN) This decode consists of addresses 300 ­ 30F without NACK or the addresses 310 ­ 318 without PRQ If the NRDYEN signal is asserted then NIOCHRDY will be driven low At all other times the NIOCHRDY strobe will be in TRI-STATE This PAL must also be a 10 ns ``D'' PAL NCS is decoded by NSTNICB (from PAL 1) along with the low assertion of SA4 and either NIOR or NIOW Its decode is in the address range of 300 ­ 30F The last two signals are NRACK and NWACK NRACK occurs with an address decode to 310 ­ 318 an NIOR and a PRQ The NWACK signal only differs from the NRACK by the NIOR NIOW signal and therefore consists of an address decode to 310 ­ 31F an NIOW and a PRQ INT is just sent through the PAL to be buffered The buffered signal which comes out of the PAL is INTO FIGURE 5 RS Flip-Flop NRESET is given by the NOR of the high asserted R-input pin and the NSOUT signal NSOUT is given by the NOR of the high asserted S-input pin and the NRESET signal The NOR gates are enabled by the low assertion of NRSTDRV When the system first boots up it will disable the NOR gates by asserting the RSTDRV signal But due to the pullup and pull-down resistors the output kNRESET NSOUTl will be set to k0 1l Once RSTDRV becomes deasserted the output will remain at k0 1l The only way to get out of reset is to assert the S-pin high which is done by an NIOW and an address decode to 318­31F After the system has booted up the ST-NIC may be reset through software This would be done by setting the R-pin high with an NIOR and an address decode to 318­31F To escape from reset we once again set the S-pin high with an NIOW and address decode of 318­31F The above description of logic is also shown in Truth Table VII 8 PAL 2 TL F 11158 ­ 7 9 PAL also be jumpered for selection of the EPROM NAEN a low asserted signal should be high to indicate that the DMA does not have control of the bus and the NSMRDC signal should be asserted high since the CPU is doing a system memory read 3 The third PAL only does a decode to enable the optional EPROM This decode consists of an address decode to C800h CC00h D000h or D400h depending on JP1 and JP0 as shown in the board configuration section JP2 must PAL 3 TL F 11158 ­ 8 10 APPENDIX C BILL OF MATERIALS FOR DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT ST-NIC ETHERNET ADAPTER CAPACITORS C1 C20 01 mF 50V C3 4 7 mF C4 0 01 mF C5 0 01 mF C9 C10 0 01 mF C11 0 75 pF C12 C19 0 01 mF C20 4 7 mF 25V C21 4 7 mF 25V C22 C29 0 01 mF C30 C32 4 7 mF 25V C33 C37 0 01 mF C38 C42 4 7 mF 25V 10% 25V 1 KV 50V 50V 1 KV 50V 20% 20% 50V 20% 50V 20% RESISTORS R1 R3 R4 R6 R7 R10 R11 R12 R13 R14 R17 R18 R19 R20 R21 R22 R25 R26 R27 R30 R31 R34 10K 4 7K 39 2 1M 270 1 5K 1K TBD 420 430 4 7K TBD 4 7K 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 IC's U1 U2 U16 U3 U4 U7 U8 U9 U10 U11 U12 U13 U15 U17 U18 U19 U20 16L8D 16L8D 16L8B 16L8B 74ALS245 74ALS245 74ALS374 74ALS374 HM6264 HM6264 74AS373 74AS373 74S288 74S288 DP83902 DP83902 DP8392 DP8392 74HC04N 74HC04N 27128 74ALS244 74ALS244 20 MHz 0 01% Monolythic 20% Tantalum 10% Ceramic Disk 10% Ceramic Disk 20% Monolythic Spark Gap 20% Monolythic Tantalum Tantalum 20% Monolythic Tantalum 20% Monolythic Tantalum 4W 4W 4W 2W 4W 4W 4W 4W 4W 4W 4W 4W 4W 5% 5% 1% 5% 5% 5% 1% 1% 5% 5% 5% 1% 5% PAL PAL 8K x 8 STATIC RAM 100 ns PROM ST-NIC CTI EPROM (not supplied on board) Crystal Oscillator Note ETHERNET ID PROM ADDRESS ASSIGNMENT Registration Authority for ISO IEC 8802-3 c o The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 445 Hoes Lane P O Box 1331 Piscataway NJ 08055-1331 (908) 562-3812 MAGNETICS (TRANSFORMER FILTER CHOKE DC-DC CONVERTOR ETC ) See Section 5 of databook Ethernet Magnetics Vendors SPARK GAP SUPPLIERS 0 75 pFkV Spark Gap Mallory Part ASR75A ASR75A (317) 856-3731 Mepco Centralab Part S758X44000NAZAA S758X44000NAZAA Available from Philips Components Discrete Product Division (602) 820-2225 11 MAGNETICS U14 T1 T2 PM7102 PM7102 VALOR DC­DC Convertor PE64103 PE64103 Pulse Engineering RX and TX Filter Transformer MISCELLANEOUS DS1 GREEN 5mm LOW CURRENT LED DS2 AMBER 5mm LOW CURRENT LED DS3 RED 5mm LOW CURRENT LED DS4 YELLOW 5mm LOW CURRENT LED DS5 GREEN 5mm LOW CURRENT LED JB1 1x3 SHUNT BLOCK WITH 1 JB2 2x6 SHUNT BLOCK WITH 1 JB3 2x6 SHUNT BLOCK WITH 1 JB4 2x6 SHUNT BLOCK WITH 1 JB5 ­ JB9 1x3 SHUNT BLOCK WITH 1 Pulse Engineering PE65431 PE65431 CURRENT4IF43 CURRENT4IF43 5m CURRENT4IF e 3 5 mA CURRENT4IF e 2 0 mA CURRENT4IF e 2 0 mA CURRENT4IF e 3 5 mA SPACING BETWEEN PINS SPACING BETWEEN PINS SPACING BETWEEN PINS SPACING BETWEEN PINS SPACING BETWEEN PINS SOCKETS MECHANICAL S1 ­ S3 20 PIN 0 3 DUAL IN-LINE FOR U1 U2 U16 (PAL) S4 28 PIN DUAL IN-LINE SOCKET FOR U18 (EPROM) S5 84 PIN PLCC SOCKET FOR U13 (ST-NIC) AMP SOCKET S8 BRACKET FOR MOUNTING IN PC-AT SLOT G44 Basic Blank J3 RJ-45 RJ-45 CONNECTOR AMP 520252-4 J4 BNC CONNECTOR RT A Low Pro Amp 227161-7 J5 15 PIN D CONNECTOR Female AMP 747247-4 (or 747845-4) MAXCON SUB D Slide Lock MDA 51220-1 BOARD ATTACHMENT COMPONENTS 1) Screw Bind Head Slotted 4­40 x 2) Washer Lock Ext 4 Zinc Steel 3) Washer Flat 4 Zinc-CRS 250 Steel (91114A005 91114A005) (90126A005 90126A005) 12 (90277A106 90277A106) 13 Note All resistors to be 5% W unless otherwise indicated Note Capacitors 39 to 42 are for the VCC signals off of the AT Bus DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT PC-AT Ethernet Evaluation Board TL F 11158 ­ 11 APPENDIX D Bus Interface NIC Section TL F 11158 ­ 9 Note All resistors to be 5% W unless otherwise indicated Note EN16 is actually a ground signal on the AT Bus J2 Connector This signal is used to determine whether 8- or 16-bit mode should be used DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT ST-NIC Ethernet Evaluation Board Schematic (Bus Interface NIC Section) 14 TL F 11158 ­ 10 DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT ST-NIC Ethernet Evaluation Board Schematic (Continued) (Bus Interface NIC Section) 15 DP83902EB-AT DP83902EB-AT PC-AT Compatible DP83902 DP83902 ST-NIC Ethernet Evaluation Board AN-752 AN-752 LIFE SUPPORT POLICY NATIONAL'S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE SUPPORT DEVICES OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN APPROVAL OF THE PRESIDENT OF NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION As used herein 1 Life support devices or systems are devices or systems which (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body or (b) support or sustain life and whose failure to perform when properly used in accordance with instructions for use provided in the labeling can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user National Semiconductor Corporation 1111 West Bardin Road Arlington TX 76017 Tel 1(800) 272-9959 Fax 1(800) 737-7018 2 A critical component is any component of a life support device or system whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support device or system or to affect its safety or effectiveness National Semiconductor Europe Fax (a49) 0-180-530 85 86 Email cnjwge tevm2 nsc com Deutsch Tel (a49) 0-180-530 85 85 English Tel (a49) 0-180-532 78 32 Fran ais Tel (a49) 0-180-532 93 58 Italiano Tel (a49) 0-180-534 16 80 National Semiconductor Hong Kong Ltd 13th Floor Straight Block Ocean Centre 5 Canton Rd Tsimshatsui Kowloon Hong Kong Tel (852) 2737-1600 Fax (852) 2736-9960 National Semiconductor Japan Ltd Tel 81-043-299-2309 Fax 81-043-299-2408 National does not assume any responsibility for use of any circuitry described no circuit patent licenses are implied and National reserves the right at any time without notice to change said circuitry and specifications